Australia: The Sickening of Democracyby John Pilger
www.dissidentvoice.org
February 3, 2005First Published in The New Statesman

National
myths are usually partly true. In Australia, the myth of an egalitarian
society, or "fair go", has an extraordinary history. Long before most of the
world, Australia had a minimum wage, a 35-hour working week, child benefits
and the vote for women. The secret ballot was invented in Australia. By the
1960s, Australians could boast the most equitable spread of personal income
in the world.

Today, these are forgotten, subversive truths. As schools are ordered to fly
the flag (its British Union Jack still mocking from on high), the maudlin
story of Australian soldiers dying pointlessly for an imperial master at
Gallipoli is elevated, along with barely veiled colonialism and racism.
Self-promoted as a bastion of human rights, Australia has become a sideshow
of their denial and degradation. Many Australians are aware of this, not
least those who filled a small Sydney theatre on 26 January, "Australia
Day", which celebrates the dispossession of the Aboriginal people by the
British in 1770. The Australian playwright Stephen Sewell's remarkable play
Myth, Propaganda and Disaster in Nazi Germany and Contemporary America
was showing at the Stables Theatre. Inspired in part by Franz Kafka's The
Trial, it strips away the democratic facade of Bush's America -- "if you
want to see America, look into the eyes of its prisoners", says one of the
principal characters. Rapacious power dressed as democracy, and the fear and
silence of its privileged -- notably academics -- are Sewell's theme and one
that is rarely discussed in public in Australia.

When the performance ended, a lawyer, Stephen Hopper, stood and spoke. It
was as if a long silence had been shattered. Hopper is the lawyer for
Mamdouh Habib, one of two Australians imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay. He
described Habib's suffering and torture, first in Egypt where he was
"rendered" by the Americans after they had kidnapped him in Pakistan. In a
CIA-supported prison in Egypt, he was suspended from the ceiling with only
an electrified barrel to stand on. "He would stand and get a shock or hang
painfully by his arms until he'd collapse," said Hopper. He was blindfolded
and locked in rooms that were flooded with water and charged with
electricity. In Guantanamo Bay, the guards brought a prostitute who "stood
over him naked while he was strapped to the floor and menstruated on him".
Photographs of Habib's wife and four children were defaced. "The Americans
in their wisdom have taken the heads off the pictures," said Hopper,
"enlarged them and superimposed them with the heads of animals and then
strung them up all over the walls of the interrogation room. [They said to
him]: 'It's a shame we had to kill your family.'" We know about these
atrocities from the earlier accounts of the British prisoners. What is
different here is that no government calling itself democratic has so
completely collaborated with the Guantanamo regime as that of John Howard.
Stephen Hopper described how an Australian official stood by as Habib was
tortured by the Americans and dragged on to a plane; there is documented
evidence of this.

The Australian attorney general, Philip Ruddock, claims he knew nothing
about this. Ruddock has relentlessly slandered Habib, and the other
Australian prisoner, David Hicks, as terrorist suspects when not a shred of
evidence has been produced. It was only when it seemed the US Supreme Court
would examine his case that Habib was hurriedly sent home. Gareth Peirce,
who represents the Guantanamo Britons, told me: "The fact that David Hicks
is before a military commission is entirely due to the Australian government
doing nothing for him." Even Hicks's American military lawyer says his
"trial", with its vaporous conspiracy charges, is a travesty. Yet Ruddock,
whose job is to resist the abuse of liberties bestowed by the law, has
allowed a mockery of the judicial process to be used brutally against
Australian citizens. Having placed Habib under constant surveillance and
prevented him from leaving the country, he now is trying to stop him
speaking publicly about the grotesque things done to him. What is clear is
that this squalid politician fears the truth that Habib is now free to tell.

It is a fear faithfully reflected by most of the Australian media. The
Sydney Morning Herald shamefully allowed an Israeli propagandist, Ted
Lapkin, to say that Habib, an innocent man under any proper legal system,
had "paid the price for his actions with incarceration by American
authorities". A leading "liberal" commentator, Michelle Grattan, has
described Habib, who is clearly damaged by his abuse, as having "entered the
celebrity category", and says he "cannot reasonably complain about
[remaining under watch] by Australian authorities". It is hardly surprising
that, according to Reporters sans Frontieres, the Australian press rates
41st on the world's press freedom index, its obsequiousness to power just
ahead of autocratic and totalitarian states. Like those in Sewell's play,
many Australian journalists remain silent (as do most Australian academics;
I can think of only three who speak out regularly). Some of the most
prominent journalists form an adoring court for a prime minister who has
out-Blaired Blair in his rank deceptions and is out-Bushing his mentor in
Washington in his demonstrable contempt for human rights.

Under Howard and Ruddock, Australia has built its own Gulag in the Pacific,
imprisoning behind razor wire Iraqis and others fleeing dictatorships. These
innocent people are held in some of the most isolated places on earth,
including Manus Island and Nauru. They include children. A Kashmiri refugee,
Peter Qasim, has been locked up for nearly seven years. The head of a UN
Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, Louis Joinet, who has made more than
40 inspections of mandatory detention facilities around the world, says he
had not seen worse abuse of human rights than in Australia. The first
Australians have experienced this for a long time. Under the Howard
government, support for Aboriginal health and legal services has diminished.
In western New South Wales, the life expectancy for Aboriginal men is 33;
Australia is the only developed country on a United Nations "shame list" of
countries that have not conquered trachoma, a preventable blindness that
affects mostly Aboriginal children, and is a disease of poverty.

Six years ago, I interviewed Ruddock when he was the federal minister
responsible for ensuring that uppity black Australians did not embarrass the
government in the run-up to the Sydney Olympics. I asked him: "How do you
feel receiving Amnesty reports on human rights violations with 'Australia'
written across the top, such as 'Aborigines are still dying in prison and
police custody at levels that may amount to cruel, inhuman and degrading
treatment'?" Smiling, he replied: "Why do they use the word 'may'?"

The land of fair go deserves better than supercilious cruelty.

John Pilger is an internationally
renowned investigative journalist and documentary filmmaker. He is currently
a visiting professor at Cornell University, New York. His latest book is
Tell Me No Lies: Investigative Journalism and its Triumphs (Jonathan
Cape, 2004). This article first appeared in
The New Statesman. Visit John Pilger's website:
www.johnpilger.com.
Thanks to Michelle Hunt at Carlton Interactive.